AeroFan_07
I'll Lock Up
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- 5,742
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- Iowa
This may be one of the most odd things I have ever posted on FL, but I think it will help me process my thoughts, and hopefully it will help someone else out at the same time.
Mattresses are simply something most of us never think about - until we really need to. In my case, my queen bed mattress is getting to around ~ 15+ years old now. I am having some back and sciatic nerve pain, seeing a good Chiropractor and sometimes a Physical Therapist. As I have moved along a recovery process from a back injury in March, I became aware that my bed really was not helping me any longer. So I did what any single dude would do; I ignored it and kept sleeping on my old mattress.
Finally I went looking at mattresses, and went home and laid back down on my old mattress and again ignored the thought for as long as I could. Why?
Well my current mattress is a Serta Firm-top Redwood inner-spring mattress. Honestly not all that bad of a mattress, as it has lasted a decade and a half. What is bit troubling is that my mattress cost around $395 in 2007. today something like it from Serta is nearly $1300.
I have also visited several hotels and slept on some really great mattresses, as well as some that bordered upon lousy. A family member I visited frequently up till ~ 2022 had a very new memory-foam mattress and I recalled sleeping very well on this. So I started down the path of memory foam - only to find two extremes. You or I could easily go buy a store-brand MF mattress for $300 - $600 that "expands upon opening" After about ~ 24-48 hours, you have a good 8" - 12" mattress ready to use, with no inner-springs, base foam + a layer of memory foam, and hopefully some sort of guarantee about sleep quality. (in many cases this does not exist). The tricky part of this option is you likely cannot try the mattress out in a store first - they are just packed in a box that you take home. Buying online would be highly similar - no try-out.
The next step is a name-brand memory foam or hybrid mattress, still bought in a box from a store, with a name such as Nectar. For a time I considered these, however finding that many of these were made containing a fiberglass portion that tended to flake out over time, and make amess in a bedroom's carpeting, I pushed that option aside. Oddly I could never confirm what is the fiberglass portion of these mattresses, and the company does not disclose this information. There are still more areas to consider in this $500 - $800 price range, however again most of these are not going to have a method to try them out first. More to research and develop.
Finally, the name-brand furniture store high quality products. This is where you will find the Setra, Sealy, and Temper-Pedic products. Each of these offers both Memory foam and hybrid mattresses (some containing ~ 1300+ inner springs!) These mattresses are a real treat just to lay down on. The higher the cost, the more honestly delightful the product. However these start out just under $1k and move straight upward to over $5K for a Queen. In other words, more than the cost of a brand new Langlitz, Aero J106 and Schott combined.
The honest truth is you are spending 1/3 of your lifetime hours on it. It should be good (and good for you).
Compared to doctor's appointments and PT appointments, which add up quickly, buying a good mattress is a worthwhile investment. It appears to also be worth taking time to research, try out and consider several options.
I would welcome any input - does anyone have some good experiences (or vice versa - ones you would avoid?)
At this point, I am thinking the front-runner is the Temper Pedic Adapt - which runs about $2200 - but that is still quite a bit to put out there for a mattress. However if you can get ~ 10 years out of it, so $2200 / 36,500 nights = $0.06 per night.
Maybe I should go one model up - $3400 /36,500 = $0.09 per night
Mattresses are simply something most of us never think about - until we really need to. In my case, my queen bed mattress is getting to around ~ 15+ years old now. I am having some back and sciatic nerve pain, seeing a good Chiropractor and sometimes a Physical Therapist. As I have moved along a recovery process from a back injury in March, I became aware that my bed really was not helping me any longer. So I did what any single dude would do; I ignored it and kept sleeping on my old mattress.
Finally I went looking at mattresses, and went home and laid back down on my old mattress and again ignored the thought for as long as I could. Why?
Well my current mattress is a Serta Firm-top Redwood inner-spring mattress. Honestly not all that bad of a mattress, as it has lasted a decade and a half. What is bit troubling is that my mattress cost around $395 in 2007. today something like it from Serta is nearly $1300.
I have also visited several hotels and slept on some really great mattresses, as well as some that bordered upon lousy. A family member I visited frequently up till ~ 2022 had a very new memory-foam mattress and I recalled sleeping very well on this. So I started down the path of memory foam - only to find two extremes. You or I could easily go buy a store-brand MF mattress for $300 - $600 that "expands upon opening" After about ~ 24-48 hours, you have a good 8" - 12" mattress ready to use, with no inner-springs, base foam + a layer of memory foam, and hopefully some sort of guarantee about sleep quality. (in many cases this does not exist). The tricky part of this option is you likely cannot try the mattress out in a store first - they are just packed in a box that you take home. Buying online would be highly similar - no try-out.
The next step is a name-brand memory foam or hybrid mattress, still bought in a box from a store, with a name such as Nectar. For a time I considered these, however finding that many of these were made containing a fiberglass portion that tended to flake out over time, and make amess in a bedroom's carpeting, I pushed that option aside. Oddly I could never confirm what is the fiberglass portion of these mattresses, and the company does not disclose this information. There are still more areas to consider in this $500 - $800 price range, however again most of these are not going to have a method to try them out first. More to research and develop.
Finally, the name-brand furniture store high quality products. This is where you will find the Setra, Sealy, and Temper-Pedic products. Each of these offers both Memory foam and hybrid mattresses (some containing ~ 1300+ inner springs!) These mattresses are a real treat just to lay down on. The higher the cost, the more honestly delightful the product. However these start out just under $1k and move straight upward to over $5K for a Queen. In other words, more than the cost of a brand new Langlitz, Aero J106 and Schott combined.
The honest truth is you are spending 1/3 of your lifetime hours on it. It should be good (and good for you).
Compared to doctor's appointments and PT appointments, which add up quickly, buying a good mattress is a worthwhile investment. It appears to also be worth taking time to research, try out and consider several options.
I would welcome any input - does anyone have some good experiences (or vice versa - ones you would avoid?)
At this point, I am thinking the front-runner is the Temper Pedic Adapt - which runs about $2200 - but that is still quite a bit to put out there for a mattress. However if you can get ~ 10 years out of it, so $2200 / 36,500 nights = $0.06 per night.
Maybe I should go one model up - $3400 /36,500 = $0.09 per night